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Tackling domestic violence: providing advocacy and support to survivors from Black and other minority ethnic communities Parmar, A.; Diamond, A.; Sampson, A.

By: Parmar, A.
Contributor(s): Diamond, A | Sampson, A.
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookSeries: Publisher: London Home Office 2005Description: 14 p. ; computer file : PDF format (137Kb).ISBN: 1844735583.Subject(s): DOMESTIC VIOLENCE | ADVOCACY | CULTURAL DIFFERENCES | ETHNIC COMMUNITIES | ETHNICITY | INTERVENTION | MINORITIES | SOCIAL WORK PRACTICE | WOMEN | INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE | UNITED STATESOnline resources: Click here to access online Summary: The aim of this report is to provide concise guidance to those practitioners who directly work with female victims of domestic violence who are from Black and other minority ethnic communities. The role of these specialist practitioners is to provide advice and support to victims and their children to ultimately help them to move safely towards violencefree lives, and they are sometimes referred to as 'advocates'; 'support workers'; 'outreach workers'; 'victim workers'; or 'navigators'. This report draws upon the independent evaluations of a number of multi-agency projects which aimed to support female victims of domestic violence, and which were funded under the remit of the Crime Reduction Programme (CRP) Violence Against Women Initiative (VAWI). More information about the evidence base for this guidance is detailed at the end of this report. Readers should refer to a related report called: Tackling Domestic Violence: providing advocacy and support to survivors of domestic violence (2005) also by Alpa Parmar, Alice Sampson and Alana Diamond, for a fuller discussion about the role of advocacy and support, and for some general good practice recommendations.
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The aim of this report is to provide concise guidance to those practitioners who directly work with female victims of domestic violence who are from Black and other minority ethnic communities. The role of these specialist practitioners is to provide advice and support to victims and their children to ultimately help them to move safely towards violencefree lives, and they are sometimes referred to as 'advocates'; 'support workers'; 'outreach workers'; 'victim workers'; or 'navigators'. This report draws upon the independent evaluations of a number of multi-agency projects which aimed to support female victims of domestic violence, and which were funded under the remit of the Crime Reduction Programme (CRP) Violence Against Women Initiative (VAWI). More information about the evidence base for this guidance is detailed at the end of this report. Readers should refer to a related report called: Tackling Domestic Violence: providing advocacy and support to survivors of domestic violence (2005) also by Alpa Parmar, Alice Sampson and Alana Diamond, for a fuller discussion about the role of advocacy and support, and for some general good practice recommendations.

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